James Comey Indicted in a Case Prosecutors Don't Seem Excited About
There is ample evidence to suspect prosecutors are just doing President Trump's dirty work rather than following the facts of the case.

This week, a federal grand jury indicted former FBI Director James Comey, a longtime antagonist of President Donald Trump—even though federal prosecutors don't seem entirely confident in the case.
According to the brief indictment signed by Lindsey Halligan, acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, Comey is charged with one count of lying to Congress and one count of obstructing a congressional proceeding; each is a felony carrying a sentence of up to five years in prison. The grand jury apparently declined to indict Comey on a second count of lying to Congress.
"My heart is broken for the Department of Justice, but I have great confidence in the federal judicial system," Comey said in a brief Instagram video. "I'm innocent, so let's have a trial, and keep the faith."
"No one is above the law," Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on X, without mentioning Comey by name. "Today's indictment reflects this Department of Justice's commitment to holding those who abuse positions of power accountable for misleading the American people. We will follow the facts in this case."
But there is reason to suspect prosecutors are doing Trump's dirty work by bringing a punitive case rather than simply "following the facts."
During his first term, Trump famously fired Comey for not dropping an investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. The president has apparently had it in for him ever since, calling him "a stupid son of a bitch" on Joe Rogan's podcast last year.
The indictment claims Comey lied during Senate testimony on September 30, 2020. At a hearing on that day, Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas) asked if Comey stood by a previous claim that he had never "been an anonymous source in news reports" about investigations related to the 2016 election; Comey said he had not.
The timing is important, as the five-year statute of limitations would have run out next week. "Assuming you decide to move forward with the Comey case—you face an immediate problem: What should you charge him with?" Benjamin Wittes and Anna Bower wrote at Lawfare earlier this week. "Trump wants Comey charged and is convinced he's guilty of something, and it's your job now to figure out what….It might just be possible to slap together a simple false statements case and get it in under the wire."
Last week, Trump fired Erik Siebert, his appointed U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, reportedly for not bringing politically motivated prosecutions. Trump then nominated Halligan, one of his personal attorneys, to replace Siebert. Halligan had no experience as a prosecutor and little experience in federal court, but The New York Times referred to her as "a go-for-the-jugular loyalist."
The day after firing Siebert, Trump criticized Bondi in a post on Truth Social, saying the Department of Justice (DOJ) was "all talk, no action" because it had yet to bring charges against his political nemeses, including Comey.
It seems Bondi had reservations just like Siebert did: CNN reported Thursday, "Bondi had concerns about the case." ("That is a flat out lie," Bondi replied.)
"After a two-month investigation, federal prosecutors in Virginia were unable to gather sufficient evidence to support bringing criminal charges against former FBI Director James Comey for allegedly lying to Congress," ABC News reported Thursday. "The prosecutors earlier this week summarized their findings—that probable cause does not exist to secure an indictment, let alone a conviction at trial—in a detailed declination memo for Lindsey Halligan."
This suggests prosecutors faced a dilemma: bring a potentially meritless case, or get fired and replaced with someone who will. It also suggests Halligan had no qualms about bringing a meritless case if it's what her boss wanted.
This isn't to say Comey is above reproach. After Trump fired him, Comey shared memos with others about his interactions with the president, with instructions to give them to the press—violating FBI policy. While not an earth-shattering scandal, lesser mortals have gone to prison for far less. In fact, in one of the memos, Comey recalls telling Trump he "was eager to find leakers and would like to nail one to the door as a message."
But it seems the DOJ isn't going after Comey because it believes there's a strong case; prosecutors are merely placating the president by punishing his perceived enemies.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
It WaS hEr TuRn!
Wow, this is going to be such a fruitful and proper use of taxpayer dollars.
*blatant sarcasm*
Abuse of powers by government employees is fine - libtards everywhere
No one actually said that...
Youre one if the retarded leftists here that thinks comments made in the past don't exist. Even your other leftist friend sullum just did say that calling it retribution and wrong. This isnt the first time LB has spoken on this topic retard.
You simpletons are funny.
Of course, because you're fully on-board when it's Democrats abusing the system and being corrupt, unaccountable political hacks. That is what you're defending here.
So tell me, how exactly do you get through your day being this retardef?
Fuck off and die, slimy pile of TDS-addled lefty shit.
Hillary is popping open a bottle of champagne to go with her vodka!! Looks like Hillary will get the last laugh for Comey and McCabe costing her the election. I love it!!
Someday, you too will have to tell me how you get through life on a daily basis being as retarded as you are.
Don't get so caught up in your partisan witchhunt that you miss the point in the article.
Are these the same prosecutors who saw absolutely nothing wrong with Hillary's private server and the national security breach that was? Why yes they are.
The comment is on video. Comey admitted he leaked information to his friend. His prior deputy admitted to being authorized to leak classified data.
But your defense is a leftist deep state actor said nuh uh.
Well-written reponses, all.
I love how the Trumpanzee refute arguments. Thoughtful and concise. Never let what was said, much less reality, inhibit you from questioning the Ultimate Truth and ridiculing the Deniers. But, if that policy is good enough your Dear Leader, then it's certainly good enough for all.
What argument? One of ignorance? Let me guess, you thought all those jack Smith led convictions were correct too. What did scotus think? You have zero independent thought. Youre just a retarded narrative pusher.
Comey admitted to leaking himself. His deputy admitted to leaking at the behest of comey. Comeys friend admitted to leaking details to the NYT.
Are you just fucking retarded?
It's all Kabuki theater.
Comey isn't going to jail
Wray isn't going to jail
Hillary isn't going to jail
Clapper isn't going to jail
Brennan isn't going to jail
Fauci isn't going to jail
The Clintons are not going to jail
Soros isn't going to jail
It's all theater for the serfs.
Grand jury was in Virginia, believe western. Not d.c.
Virginia is for lovers…especially Roanoke.
"The timing is important, as the five-year statute of limitations would have run out next week."
And we certainly can't do anything when that 5 year limit is up. That's a privilege only people prosecuting Trump get to have.
Fair point. Hey, Democrats: reap = sow.
Reminder that Comey has always been a Republican.
Elephant? Or R(h)ino...
You misspelled “RINO”.
Nobody cares.
Reminder that Moo Cow has always been a slimy pile of TDS addled shit.
Fuck off and die, asswipe.
I'll note all of his defenders do not actually deny that he committed perjury.
Also, "Trump famously fired Comey for not dropping an investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election." is 100% false. He fired him because he refused to say publicly what he told Trump privately --- that he was not under FBI investigation. He allowed that rumor to continue.
So, fuck him. Fire his retarded ass. And then he leaks classified info to a friend of his. Fuck him twice.
His future fellow federal penal colony inmates might very well be doing that to him soon.
Comey isn't going to jail. Neither is anyone else.
Comey also mishandled classified information, sending it to his buddy to leak the papers.
Even though I personally don't believe that lying to Congress should be a crime, it is one.
Same with lying to the FBI.
Wait. Career federal prosecutors are against accountability?? Say it ain't so.
How did they feel about Jack Smith and Garland?
That would be, of course, (D)ifferent.
Or the J6 prosecutions, those are very telling compared to how they respond to the multiple Democrat takeovers and assaults on DC versus a Republican protest with a side scuffle.
When we said "No one is above the law", we didn't mean Democrats!!
The both of them are enjoying their retirement and you're paying for it.
So dont hold them accountable based on your prior post.
Being able to lie to Congress is an important perk if you work for the DOJ. None of them want to lose it.
I think McCabe unilaterally lied about the Clinton Foundation indictments because of the ridiculous notion he was a Democrat because his wife in the medical profession supported Romneycare. I guess James Carville is a Republican because his wife supported Bush/Cheney??
>>There is ample evidence
unless you report from the grand jury room fuck off a little.
>>The timing is important, as the five-year statute of limitations would have run out next week.
yes that's how statutes work. there is zero implication to the date of indictment
Unless it's a civil suit for rape in NYC.
true. but hush you'll wake sarc up and we'll have to hear retribution! all afternoon
Is that what the grey box rants about these days? I only unmute him rarely to see what level of spittle inducing lunacy he's going on about now. Thanks for sharing me that.
Ha.
You know who else was doing a president's dirty work without actually following the evidence?
Eric Holder?
Jimmy Kimmel?
Hunter Biden?
David Axelrod?
Javier the janitor?
G. Gordon Liddy?
Chumba Wumba!
Otto Penn?
. Trump then nominated Halligan, one of his personal attorneys, to replace Siebert. Halligan had no experience as a prosecutor and little experience in federal court, but The New York Times referred to her as "a go-for-the-jugular loyalist."
*gasp*
Did they?
*gets dejected*
Well... if the New York Times said it then... I guess... I guess that's it then. There it is.
How many feet away is Reason from demanding qualified immunity for federal officials?
Every single beat cop with a HS diploma who gets accused of anything? Reason screams "hang 'em high."
The former director of an historically corrupt domestic spy agency gets hoisted on his own petard? Here comes Reason clucking about "due process."
Remember, it’s (D)ifferent.
No. Fucking. Kidding.
Fuck Comey, and fuck Reason's quintuple standard on abuses of power.
I don't think they've ever said or implied that cops who do bad things shouldn't receive due process. Of course, being indicted is part of due process. What due process is he not receiving?
Edit: I don't see any clucking about due process here. The claim is that it's a meritless case, which is a different complaint, and one that's more an argument about facts than process.
Grand jury disagrees it is meritless. Only the deep state prosecutor crying to the journalists are making that claim.
The entire narrative is based on the claim throughout the media that prosecutors don't have faith in the case. How do they know that? Oh that's right. Anonymous people in a position to have access. We don't know who the fuck they are but trust us. No way they are deep state friends of Comey. The lying to Congress shouldn't be controversial. It's all on video and the congressional and public record. It's not complicated.
Couldn't possibly be the unindicted co-conspirators still in the DOJ.
Everyone is going to be so disappointed when no one goes to jail.
That's right...ain't nobody goin' to jail.
Wray ain't goin'
Jack Smith ain't goin'
Garland ain't goin'
James ain't goin'
Schiff ain't goin'
Enjoy the show.
Blackpill much?
There is ample evidence to suspect prosecutors are just doing President Trump's dirty work rather than following the facts of the case.
A grand jury believes, based on the evidence presented to it, there is at least enough evidence to support the charge.
Next on the docket? US v. Ham Sandwich.
It’s weird how when Trump is found guilty by a jury, it’s proof he’s being persecuted, but if the notoriously low standard of a grand jury indictment is met against his enemies, it’s proof of guilt.
But I’m sure the double standard and hypocrisy will be waved away by the Paleocon Idiot’s Brigade.
Please point to where in my statement I wrote anything close to "[Trump]'s being persecuted" or "a grand jury indictment is [] proof of guilt."
I made no such assertions.
All I suggested was, a properly impaneled grand jury heard evidence that Comey committed crimes, and the grand jury, after considering the evidence, decided there was at least enough evidence to support the charges, and returned an indictment.
As for "proof of guilt", that will be up to a jury in the Eastern District of Virginia to decide after hearing evidence presented by the prosecution and any defense to the charges presented by Comey's attorneys.
Justice for Martha
Embarrassing.
Durham was never embarrassed with his weak cases. Durham was a good soldier and did his duty for the GOP.